Health Checks for the Ketogenic Diet
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There are several Health Risks of the Ketogenic Diet, so unlike other diets, health tests and monitoring are important. Note that a Ketogenic Diet should be under medical supervision, which includes this monitoring.
1 Basic Monitoring
- Ketone Testing. To know if you are on a ketogenic diet or not, you will need to check your ketone levels.
- Daily Blood Ketone Testing. The levels of Blood Ketones should be checked each day.
- Urine Ketone Levels. In addition to checking Blood Ketones, it is fairly cheap and simple to check urine ketone levels. This is not as accurate or reliable as blood testing, but it can be performed more frequently, so you get a sense of how your ketone levels change to the day.
- Blood Glucose. Blood glucose should be monitored every 6–8 hours during the first few days of the diet[1].
- Blood in the Urine. Because of the risk of kidney stones, urine should be checked for trace levels of blood at least weekly. It can be done with Multistix or the cheaper Phinex Multistix equivalent. These strips check for 10 different things, including trace blood, Ketone levels, hydration status and urine acidity.
- Blood lipid levels. Cholesterol and triglyceride levels should be checked before starting the diet, and every few months[2].
- Blood selenium levels should be checked every three months, though this may not be frequent enough[3].
2 Recommended Laboratory Tests
The following tests are recommended for children starting the ketogenic diet for epilepsy[4]. Details of these tests are outside the scope of this article.
- Complete blood count with platelets.
- Electrolytes, including serum bicarbonate, total Protein, calcium, zinc, selenium, Magnesium and phosphate.
- Serum liver and kidney test (including albumen, AST, ALT, blood urea nitrogen creatinine)
- Fasting lipid profile.
- Serum acylcarnitine profile.
- Urinalysis.
- Urine calcium and creatinine.
- Urine organic salts.
- Serum amino acids.
3 See Also
- The classifications and types of Low Carbohydrate Diet.
- An introduction to the Ketogenic Diet.
- My experiences with ultrarunning on the Ketogenic Diet
- How the Ketogenic Diet can be used for the treatment and management of disease.
- Health Risks of the Ketogenic Diet
- Health Checks for the Ketogenic Diet
- Supplements for the Ketogenic Diet
- The time frame and changes that occur with Ketoadaptation
- What are Ketones
- The pros and cons of the Ketogenic Diet for athletes
- The Types of Ketogenic Diet
- My Ketogenic Recipes
- Non-Ketogenic Low Carbohydrate Diets
4 References
- ↑ Eric. Kossoff, Ketogenic diets : treatments for epilepsy and other disorders, date 2011, publisher Demos Health, location New York, isbn 1-936303-10-8, Page 240
- ↑ Eric. Kossoff, Ketogenic diets : treatments for epilepsy and other disorders, date 2011, publisher Demos Health, location New York, isbn 1-936303-10-8, Kindle Offset 2882
- ↑ NS. Sirikonda, WD. Patten, JR. Phillips, CJ. Mullett, Ketogenic diet: rapid onset of selenium deficiency-induced cardiac decompensation., Pediatr Cardiol, volume 33, issue 5, pages 834-8, Jun 2012, doi 10.1007/s00246-012-0219-6, PMID 22367552
- ↑ Eric. Kossoff, Ketogenic diets : treatments for epilepsy and other disorders, date 2011, publisher Demos Health, location New York, isbn 1-936303-10-8, Kindle Offset 1889